1. First molecular detection of Onchocerca flexuosa (Wedl, 1856) in red deer in Slovakia.
- Author
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Barbušinová, Eva, Iglódyová, Adriana, Čurlík, Ján, Lazar, Peter, Mravcová, Kristína, Štrkolcová, Gabriela, Mucha, Rastislav, and Karolová, Renáta
- Subjects
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RED deer , *ROE deer , *FALLOW deer , *UNGULATES , *RIBOSOMAL RNA - Abstract
The present paper deals with the post-mortem diagnostics of onchocerciasis and the molecular detection of causative agents of this disease in wild ruminant ungulates (Cervus elaphus, Dama dama and Capreolus capreolus). The animals were shot in hunting seasons 2017 and 2018, in two regions of the Eastern Slovakia. The total number of examined skins was fifty-eight. The presence of subcutaneous nodules was confirmed in 27.59% (95% CI 16–39) of animals. All positive skins belonged to red deer individuals (47.06%; 95% CI 30–64). The nodules were present mainly in the back area and in the lumbar area, and their sizes ranged from 2.9 to 24.1 mm, with the average count of 10 nodules per animal. Thirteen worms, isolated from the nodules collected from 13 animals, were subjected to molecular identification. Applying the standard PCR method, targeting the mitochondrial 12S rRNA, 16S rRNA and NADH-dehydrogenase gene, and subsequent sequencing, all the worms were identified as Onchocerca flexuosa Wedl, 1856. The sequences were submitted to GenBank under specific accession numbers. Two samples were identified as Onchocerca flexuosa haplotype B, in which T176A and A177T were present. Despite the presence of mutations in the 12S rRNA of the Onchocerca flexuosa, the standardized PCR remains to be a very specific and sensitive method that uses this fragment as a selectable marker for the detection of the studied parasite. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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